Journalists who took on Putin and Duterte win Nobel Peace Prize
Journalists Maria Ressa and Dmitry Muratov, who braved the wrath of the leaders of the Philippines and Russia to expose corruption and misrule, won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, in an endorsement of free speech worldwide.
The two were awarded “for their courageous fight for freedom of expression” in their countries, Norwegian Nobel Committee Chairwoman Berit Reiss-andersen told a news conference.
“They are representatives of all journalists who stand up for this ideal in a world in which democracy and freedom of the press face increasingly adverse conditions,” she added. “Free, independent and fact-based journalism serves to protect against abuse of power, lies and war propaganda.”
Muratov dedicated his award to six contributors to his Novaya Gazeta newspaper murdered for their work exposing human rights violations and corruption.
“Igor Domnikov, Yuri Shchekochikhin, Anna Politkovskaya, Stas Markelov, Anastasia Baburova, Natasha Estemirova — these are the people who have today won the Nobel Prize,” Muratov said.
Ressa called the prize “a global recognition of the journalist’s role in repairing, fixing our broken world.
“It’s never been as hard to be journalist as it is today,” said Ressa, a 35-year veteran journalist, who said she was tested by years of legal cases in the Philippines brought by the authorities over the work of her Rappler investigative website. “You don’t really know who you are until you are forced to fight for it.”
The prize is the first Nobel Peace Prize for journalists since the German Carl von Ossietzky won it in 1935 for revealing his country’s secret post-war rearmament program.
Muratov, 59, is the first Russian to win the peace prize since Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev in 1990. Gorbachev himself has long been associated with Muratov’s newspaper, having contributed some of his Nobel prize money to help set it up.
Ressa, 58, is the first individual winner of a Nobel prize in any field from the Philippines. Rappler, which she co-founded in 2012, has grown prominent through investigative reporting, including into large scale killings during a police campaign against drugs.
In August, a Philippine court dismissed a libel case against Ressa, one of several suits against her. She says she has been targeted because of her news site’s critical reports on President Rodrigo Duterte.
She was one of several journalists named Time Magazine Person of the Year in 2018 for fighting intimidation. The Philippines was once seen as a standard bearer for Asian press freedoms.
Many Russian journalists are being forced to register as agents of foreign states, a designation that invites official paperwork and public contempt.
“We will leverage this prize in the interests of Russian journalism which (the authorities) are now trying to repress,” Muratov told Podyom, a journalism website. “We will try to help people who have been recognized as agents, who are now being treated like dirt and being exiled from the country.”
Reiss-andersen said the Nobel committee intended the award to send a message about the importance of rigorous journalism at a time when technology has made it easy to spread falsehoods. “We find that people are manipulated by the press, and ... fact-based, high-quality journalism is in fact more and more restricted,” she said.
It was also was a way to shine a light on the difficult situations for journalists, specifically under the leadership in Russia and the Philippines, she added.
“I don’t have insight in the minds of neither Duterte nor Putin. But what they will discover is attention is directed towards their nations, and they will have to defend the present situation, and I am curious how they will respond,” Reiss-andersen said.
The Kremlin congratulated Muratov. “He persistently works in accordance with his own ideals, he is devoted to them, he is talented, he is brave,” a spokesman said.
The Nobel Peace Prize will be presented on Dec. 10.